AA x 33, 3b, Allin, Elementary League

josemar: How can you not pay with AA? 15 minutes into the tournament (1,500 start), I've won grain by grain (42 hands) 3.5, with AA 2 fold, I hold on and give 3B, Allin's Villain with 33 on the Button... 4,6,J,3 and 8 come out. In short; I'm in bad shape, should I cry or not play with AA? :(:mad:

Anderson0001: How can you not pay with AA? After 15 minutes of tournament play (1,500 starting bets), I've won grain by grain (42 hands) 3.5, with AA 2 fold, I hold on and give 3B, Allin's Villain with 33 on the Button... 4,6,J,3 and 8 come out. In short; I'm in bad shape, is it time to cry or not play with AA? :(:mad:

It's hair-pulling kkkkkkk

These bads are very annoying. There are times when poker seems to be unfair to us.

The fact is; it's the nature of poker to be like this. Suffering bads, taking a cooler and still enduring the fluctuations and the low tide is not an easy thing to go through, and it's gotten worse in a row.

It makes it possible for any player (good or bad) to win.

Think on the bright side. You won't always win with AA, but most of the time you'll win with one.

Now imagine you're all-in with 33 and the villain calls with AA and you take the pot. How would you feel?

Next time, the important thing is that you made the right move.

:happy34:

LeoVitorGT: josemar, if that 1% is a bum, imagine 20%! lol lol
Jokes aside, fortunately it's the game, think about the long term and it will soon pass. #mindsetvencedor

josemar: It's hair-raising kkkkkkk

These bads are very annoying. There are times when poker seems to be unfair to us.

The fact is; it's the nature of poker to be like this. Suffering bads, taking a cooler and still enduring the fluctuations and the low tide is not an easy thing to go through, and it's gotten worse in a row.

It makes it possible for any player (good or bad) to win.

Think on the bright side. You won't always win with AA, but most of the time you'll win with one.

Now imagine you're all-in with 33 and the villain calls with AA and you take the pot. How would you feel?

Next time, the important thing is that you made the right move.

:happy34:

I'm thinking of not going all in without seeing the flop, a high pair doesn't show much in this league at the start of the game, I lost another hand with KK, I sent 3b and got a royal, I lost to two pairs (7 and 2) lol. the villains go all in with anything?

josemar: Another tear-jerker, second hand at JeckPot $6.8k, with AA 3b x 22 call and I take (9,4,2...)villain allin I call and I take bad... in short at the start of a championship/tournament AA/KK/QQ I don't get excited and I fold allin or stop playing.

Anderson0001: Nice, but the fact that it's a long tournament and at the beginning of the championship is worth the risk? I'm thinking of not going all in without seeing the flop, a high pair doesn't show much in this league at the beginning of the game, I lost another hand with KK I sent 3b and I took a royal, I lost to two pairs (7 and 2) lol. the villains go all in with anything?

Good,

As for whether it's worth the risk or not, you're the one who has to make that decision, because it depends on what you want. If your goal is to advance in tournaments, taking that risk tends not to pay off in many cases. When you're about to go all in pre-flop, you can't complain about the result, because luck kicks in when you put all your chips on the table first. If you really want to play a tournament without taking too many risks of this nature, you can opt for post-flop play.

But here comes another point. Playing post-flop with AA, for example, requires a lot of care and skill to avoid losing. Many people think that AA is like the zap in truco, which beats any card. Despite being a pre-flop favorite, it's not invincible, because poker works collectively with the cards on the table, making it a very unpredictable game.

In technical terms, there are many ways to play AA both pre- and post-flop in various situations and tournament levels.

Some players want to be aggressive without techniques. They put the pressure on, but without big cards in their hand.

Many players end up paying with anything for various reasons; either because they just want to have fun, or they don't care and are in tilt situations, for example.

There are a lot of these players on the micros. Freerolls, for that matter. They have nothing to lose. So they can call allin even with 72.

Watch the videos below and identify the mistakes the villains made in these situations.
Watch the videos and respond so we can discuss the subject:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRuZZR4ki4c

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPmQLmo3Qzc

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X63eqPcVccQ

josemar: Thanks for the heads up, I think it was tilt, it was about 4 tournaments in a row playing seemingly right but just in time with a monster hand comes the high risk (more than double or nothing) the villains hit the hand. Play with AA regardless of the position, start with 3b or a raise (take some speculators off the table) and let's see the flop, if it's a straight on 3, nailed or a pair I'll pull the plug. Most of the time I'd have to win (I've lost 4 in a row), but I wonder about the randomness of the cards in PS, like the one in the last video, I've seen similar situations many times with 3 or 4 players having exemplary hands where everyone believed they'd win and the allin is practically inevitable.

Anderson0001: Thanks for the heads up, I think it was tilt, it was about 4 tournaments in a row playing seemingly right but just in time with a monster hand comes the high risk (more than double or nothing) the villains hit the hand. Play with AA regardless of the position, start with 3b or a raise (take some speculators off the table) and let's see the flop, if it's a straight on 3, nailed or a pair I'll pull the plug. Most of the time I'd have to win (I've lost 4 in a row), but I wonder about the randomness of the cards in PS, like the one in the last video, I've seen similar situations many times with 3 or 4 players having exemplary hands where everyone believed they'd win and the allin is practically inevitable.

It's through josemar post-loss hand analysis that we adjust mistakes and calibrate a game that maximizes our chances of being a seller in poker.

It's worth remembering that the probability of winning a hand or not doesn't take chronological order into account. As you mentioned when you lost 4 times in a row, the mathematics of poker doesn't work with this account, that of winning 3 losing 1 with AA for example. The math is in general, like; for every 100 times you go all in pre-flop with AA, you'll win 80 of the times. That means you'll lose 20. In other words, those 20 times you lose won't necessarily be random, but they could come consecutively, giving you up to 10 losses in a row with AA. But if you add up your last 100 pre-flop allins with AA, you'll have around 80 wins.

All of this depends on many factors such as strategy, psychology, attention, mathematics, perception, bluffs, skill, technique (and one element that everyone has when starting out in poker, which is knowledge of the rules and structures of game modes and tournaments), as well as luck, which interferes with some results (in this case when we push our chips in blindly or when we are unlucky enough for the villain to hit a better hand than ours, which we call a cooler).

This is the sport of the mind!

Imartin007: Nive te
U

Imartin007: Wow this is not responsible

Imartin007: AA os the Win

Imartin007: Best hand

Antoniolisp: Wow, I thought I was the only one this happened to....kkkkk

Joking aside..... hurts the soul when this happens...but it's the game....

Anderson0001: Wow, I thought I was the only one this happened to....kkkkk

Joking aside..... hurts the soul when this happens...but it's the game....

That's right!

That's why it's important to read "about"
That's why the forum is important!
We get to know the nature of the game in more depth!

juliopfleger: Good evening

I don't particularly like going all in pre-flop, whether it's with AA or KK or AK, and I'm still cautious about position.

at

Anderson0001: Good evening

I don't particularly like going all in pre-flop, whether it's with AA or KK or AK, and I'm still cautious about position.

at

I think it might be a lesson given to the player who goes all-in with these cards. Presumably because of the tumbles they usually take at the start of the game.

But despite these assumptions, it's worth remembering that the league is in fact a place to learn and be rewarded for it in the end. And that even if player x enters as AA, many others usually pay behind. This continually reduces the chances of winning with every intruder in the hand.

astropoker: I also believe that we should be cautious with AA-KK but not afraid to play post-flop.

Lock1975: You played it right. It's just that one day the bad guy wins too. But in the long run and by playing several tournaments, you'll win a lot more than you'll lose in an AA x 33...

Jhow guim: it's crying, but unfortunately it's the game. if it's a turbo or super turbo tournament... you'll see worse bad beats... kkkkkkkkkk

Exorciser: it's crying, but unfortunately it's the game. if it's a turbo or super turbo tournament... you'll see worse bad beats... kkkkkkkkkkk

That's right... The range is very wide, it's ugliness against ugliness kkkkk

Walderson-CE: KKKKKKKK
It's worth investing in AA
Bads are part of the career!:thumbsup:

Anderson0001: KKKKKKKK
It's worth investing in AA
Bads are part of the career!:thumbsup:

Indeed! There are no easy folders. Imbecility is to keep insisting on a flop e.g. 789 with the same suits as yours! Then it's too risky to push.

Bads are part of it! The bad thing is when they get used to pushing in any way. The game loses its seriousness, loses its fun and becomes a mess. That's what happens in a lot of games out there!

What could be better than trying the technique at the table?
There are live and online players who push by bluffing. That's a move. Doing it all the time is pushing it. And oddly enough, it's causing serious players to lose heart. Total boredom. If they don't migrate to longer, more expensive tournaments or go live, they usually quit.

This is a typical game of serious poker:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=En0L9lqxSvE&ab_channel=elpokerfan

guilherme_27th: Indeed! No one can fold easily. Imbecility is to keep insisting on a flop e.g. 789 with the same suits as yours! Then it's too risky to push.

Bads are part of it! The bad thing is when they get used to pushing in any way. The game loses its seriousness, loses its fun and becomes a mess. That's what happens in a lot of games out there!

What could be better than trying the technique at the table?
There are live and online players who push by bluffing. That's a move. Doing it all the time is pushing it. And oddly enough, it's causing serious players to lose heart. Total boredom. If they don't migrate to longer, more expensive tournaments or go live, they usually quit.

This is a typical game of serious poker:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=En0L9lqxSvE&ab_channel=elpokerfan

Or if you hit the 789 flop, depending on the size of your stack and if you're only facing 1 player, you'll be all in on the flop right away; just don't slowplay in these positions, it's always bad.

Anderson0001: Or if you hit that flop 789, depending on the size of your stack and if you're only facing 1, you'll be all in on the flop right away; you just can't slowplay in those positions, it's always bad.

Yes, every precaution must be taken!

Original author: josemar.

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